Video Transcript: Promising Cancer Cure Cover-Up by Big Pharma
Ty Bollinger: Talk about the California report
of 1953. I’ve read some of your writings about the California report and
it’s a very interesting topic.
G. Edward Griffin:
It is and it’s a clear example of the degree to which, I guess there’s
no other word… but fraud. The degree to which fraud; deliberate,
conscious fraud can be injected into what we would normally think is a
scientific process.
Early in the days of the development of laetrile [amygdalin or
vitamin B17] there were stories circulating that
people were getting
well. They were being treated and they were coming back from the edge of
the grave and so forth. So naturally the pharmaceutical industry wanted
to put an end to this and so they set up a deal where they wanted to
have it tested. The idea is “okay, none of this discussion about people
getting saved, none of these little stories. Let’s do a scientific
test.”
Everybody was in favor of that except they insisted that only those
who were opponents of laetrile do the tests and nobody else could do the
tests, you see. It had to be the oncologists and the people on the
staff of the pharmaceutical industry and so forth. To
make a long story short, and it is a long story, the California branch
of the AMA − California Medical Association − was given the task of
doing a test on laetrile.
The people who were in charge of this were all in the cancer
industry. The two men, as I remember the names correctly that wrote the
analysis of the report were Drs. McFarland and Garland, I think.
McFarland, I think, was a surgeon and Garland, I think, was a
radiologist. Or maybe it was the other way around, but there was a
surgeon and a radiologist and the other members of the panel were all in
similar positions. Most of them were radiologists, interestingly
enough, I think.
So anyway they all had kind of a vested interest in NOT finding
something that would interfere with their businesses you see. So there
was sort of a bias built in. Anyway, they did this very fine scientific
study using mice and so forth. They spent a lot of money and they
produced the report, and McFarland and Garland announced that there was
no evidence whatsoever that laetrile had any effect whatsoever in the
control of cancer. So that was all anybody needed to hear. There was
something done by the California Medical Association and two fine
upstanding doctors.
Well these doctors, just to give you an idea of how fine and
scientifically astute they were, these were the guys… both of them said
that there was no connection at all between cigarette smoking and lung
cancer.
Ty Bollinger: Same doctors?
G. Edward Griffin: Same doctors, yeah. Before they
got involved in this report. They had already been bought and paid for
by the tobacco industry, of course. In fact, I think it was McFarland
that even made this fantastic quote, “a pack a day keeps cancer away.”
Ty Bollinger: I’ve seen the newspaper ads that they used to run that had that exact quote. That was from him?
G. Edward Griffin: That was from him. He was one of
the guys. Incidentally, he died in bed some years later in a fire
started by his cigarette in bed.
Ty Bollinger: Wow.
G. Edward Griffin: Burned him up. I mean I’m sorry to see anybody die, especially from fire, but I thought it was a certain irony to that.
Ty Bollinger: Poetic justice.
G. Edward Griffin: Poetic justice or something. And
the other guy died of cancer of the lung. They were both heavy smokers.
So anyway that gives you a little idea of the scientific expertise of
these guys. Well, as far as most doctors are concerned, if they see a
report from the California Medical Association and it’s accepted by the
teaching institutions, there’s no question that that is science. That’s
authentic.
Ty Bollinger: That’s gospel truth.
G. Edward Griffin: That is gospel truth. Well, it
was accepted as gospel truth for quite awhile and then we got hold of a
copy of the full report. I’ve forgotten how we did it, but we did, and
it was a big, thick report. All anybody ever read was that cover page
where McDonald and Farland, no McFarland and Garland. I’ll get it
straight. Sounds like a comedy routine.
Ty Bollinger: Who’s on first?
G. Edward Griffin: Who’s on first, yeah. Anyway, all
anybody ever saw was that little summary that they wrote. And it turns
out that these guys never used laetrile themselves. They were just sort
of analyzing the laboratory results of the study and this was their
summary. Well, when you go back and read the actual pages of the report,
the summary was a lie. An absolute lie.
Ty Bollinger: Kind of like the Cliff notes being incorrect.
G. Edward Griffin: The Cliff notes were incorrect.
Ty Bollinger: Okay.
G. Edward Griffin: Nobody ever went back to look at,
there was plenty of evidence in the laboratory work that it did retard
the growth of cancer. In spite of the fact that there was a high
question about the quality of the laetrile they were using. In fact, it
was pretty obvious that they did not have a good quality laetrile. It
was also obvious they were using lower dosages than was being used in
the clinics. And in spite of those two handicaps, the laboratory results
were reporting case after case after case where these mice were
recovering from cancer. Right in the body of the report and yet the
summary was “there was absolutely no evidence that…” you know, etcetera,
etcetera. This was sort of the flagship of what had been repeated many
times since then. Sloan Kettering report did pretty much the same thing.
It goes on and on and on and once people realize that not only is
there just ineptitude or bias in the cancer industry. Bias against
natural therapies, but also deliberate fraud. Now we’re dealing with a
different animal. Because when you consider the number of people who die
from cancer, this amounts to genocide.
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